Inside Japan’s Most Expensive Fruit Parlor
Tokyo’s Sembikiya looks like a jewelry shop.
This is a luxury fruit parlor in Tokyo.
It
is the flagship store of the Sembikiya fruit emporium. Run by the same
Samurai-descendant family since 1834, Sembikiya began as a discount
fruit store. But the wife of the second-generation owner decided they
could make more money the other way around.
Source: blogs.yahoo.co.jp
But it is not actually a grocery store.
It is a gift shop. Sembikiya management estimates that 80-90 percent
of their products are bought as gifts as it’s customary in Japan to
give high-end fruits as presents for formal occasions like weddings,
business transactions, and hospital visits.
What you can buy here: $21 “Sekai-ichi” apples. 21 đô một trái táo
You read that right, $21 per apple. “Sekai-ichi” means “world’s best.” These apple were presumably watered with honey.
Source: 4.bp.blogspot.com
$212 for a square watermelon . 212 đô một quả dưa
Source: galatea00
$69 for a twelve-pack of Queen Strawberries . 69 đô một hộp dâu tây
This would be an expensive 12-piece sushi meal even at a world-class restaurant.
Source: staplenews.com
Cherries for $159.50 per box ($4 per cherry) . 159.50 đô / hộp ( 4 đô một quả cerise )
$64 box of grapes . 64 đô một hộp nho
Source: anakorpa
Or maybe you’d prefer a medly of 6 fruits for $170 .170 đô một hộp 5 món trái cây
Source: brad_lp80
Or $127 for a Densuke watermelon . 127 đô một quả dưa hấu
As recently as 2011, Hokkaido farmers mourned the
steep price drop for these stripeless watermelons, with the top crop of
the season “only” auctioning for $4,000. Only 100 of these watermelons
are grown each year in Hokkaido .
Source: anakorpa
Yubari cantaloups ($160 for one, or $265 for two) . Melon 160 đô một quả , hoặc 265 đô hai quả
They are the most expensive fruits on earth.
Source: brad_lp80
What’s
so special about these cantaloups? For one, they’re grown in perfectly
weathered greenhouses and given hats to prevent sun burn. Each plant
only grows one fruit, to receive the whole plant’s sweetness — farmers
prune the less perfect fruits early on.
Via: staplenews.com
So how did fruit become a luxury gift item?
According to research by Takasago,
an international flavor and fragrance company based in Japan , fruit as
a luxury item stems from the fact that vegetables were always plentiful
in Japanese agriculture, meaning fruit was not essential for nutrition.
Source: janealdenstevens.com
In
Europe , where Western culture originated, much of the water is hard
water, which is difficult to drink, and few crops could provide a source
of vitamins throughout the year, so fruits, which were rich in water
content and vitamins, were considered essential food in people’s lives.
Fruits were also the main type of preserved foods, being used for jams,
juices, wines, and more. In contrast, Japan has a lot of rain, good
quality water, and the availability of an abundance of vegetables and
edible wild plants year round, from which water content and vitamins can
easily be obtained. For this reason fruits were always considered
luxury items and gift items.
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Source: takasago.com
The Sembikiya family claims responsibility for
helping start the tradition of fruit gift giving decades ago. And
that’s partially true: Because there’s a market for fruit as a high-end
gift, farmers go to extreme measures to highten the fruits flavor and to
ensure a blemishless presentation: Orchards are hand-pollinated with tiny wands, fruits are given individual protective boxes to grow in, and apples are branded by stencil.
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